Senator Robert Owen of Oklahoma and the Federal Reserve's formative years
Chad Wilkerson
Economic Review, 2013, issue Q III, 95-117
Abstract:
U.S. Senator Robert Owen of Oklahoma played a key role in the formation of the Federal Reserve in the early twentieth century. He championed the creation of a quasi-public central bank with a decentralized structure. Author Chad Wilkerson explores how Senator Owen contributed to the Fed's early development and sought a Fed structure that would avoid placing too much control either in a centralized agency in Washington, D.C., or in a small number of Wall Street bankers. Owen generally praised the Fed's early performance but became a critic in the early 1920s, and again in the 1930s, when its deflationary policies were especially harmful to the agricultural economy of his home region.
Keywords: Federal Reserve - History; Robert (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2013
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